Leah Commandeur: Hi Corey, how are you?
Corey Mylchreest: I’m good, dude. How are you doing?
LC: Not too bad, thank you. Are you on the move right now?
CM: Oh, yes, I am. I’m off to a fitting for a job, I’m meeting the costume team.
LC: How glamorous. I’d love to start with your new show Hostage, which came out in August, seeing you unlock a new type of role for the thriller genre. How was it switching it up from your past two projects which were in the romance realm?
CM: From an actor’s standpoint, it doesn’t really ever change. You’ve got to try and treat the person that you’re playing as a person who – as we all are – completely naive to their life being made a film out of or what genre it would be. Going around thinking about what genre your life is a bit strange. So I don’t think that in terms of the departure from rom-com to thriller, it was necessarily that difficult. I think if anything, there’s slightly more freedom to be real. Although on the other hand I don’t know if I agree with that.
LC: Was there anything that went into behind-the-scenes preparation for Matheo that was new to you?
CM: Well this character worked for an NGO. He worked in trying to re-stabilize and rehouse asylum seekers, very topical now, and he was fighting the good fight shall we say. I really don’t know how I did it, but I did some research on different NGOs and what companies I thought he might have worked with. I sent a few emails out, made a few calls and ended up speaking to someone really high up. I won’t name them, but it was brilliant. I had an hour and a half conversation with this person who was really kind enough to give me some time. So, I really felt like I was able to fill out Matheo as a character, fill out his life, because in a different sense to Queen Charlotte [A Bridgerton Story] and My Oxford Year that had come out before this, Matheo’s not on screen all the time. It meant I’d got a lot of his life to fill out in my imagination and for me, that stuff’s really important. I wanted to know exactly what his day-to-day life was like and what kind of duties were expected of him. Then you have to explore all the family stuff and what’s his social life like, plus class, culture, education. But I wanted to do that, and it was very fun to do.
LC: That level of research is really impressive. You speak some French in the show, alongside your co-star and famous French actress, Julie Delpy. People online have been saying you did a great job at the accent, so firstly congratulations. How much preparation went into honing that skill?
CM: From the bottom of my heart, thank you. I was so terrified of doing it. I really was convinced that I had done an awful job. I did quite a lot of ADR, which is a dialogue replacement when you’re in a booth and you’re just talking in a microphone replacing the words that you said while filming the scene. I did those two French lines about 60 times. Literally, no joke. I used to be quite good at having a conversation in Spanish or German but now I’ve lost both of those because I haven’t used them in so long. French I’ve never done anything with. With German, it’s at the very back of the throat, and with Spanish, there’s a lot of rolling your Rs, which is right at the front of your mouth. Whereas, French feels like it’s all in the middle. To say those lines right now, I’d do maybe the worst job out of anyone.
LC: Good thing you don’t need to do them again. I read that music is a huge tool that helps you get into the mindset of your characters or performing in general, so I was wondering what was your playlist for getting ready on the Hostage set?
CM: Oh wow, that’s such a good question. I’m actually very intrigued myself so I’m gonna pull up my Spotify playlist for Matheo Lewis. Here he is. We’ve got a bit of Hans Zimmer in there. Some Kurt Weill. Nora Jones. I’ve got quite a lot of Rod Stewart in here, and Glen Campbell. Question It All by Lucy Rose was the song that I would listen to in the mornings.
LC: I need to go and listen to this playlist. I noticed that a lot of the characters you have played have a level of devastation to them or in their general storylines. Is that something intentional when choosing a project or just purely coincidental?
CM: I’m clearly trying to sort out some stuff, aren’t I? It’s not intentional. If I’m completely honest, I don’t think I’m the best actor in the world by any margin but I think that I do have a hunger to play the characters that are maybe not “normal”, whatever that means as there is no normal, but when I get artistically invested in something I look for that three-dimensionality or that inner conflict wherever I can. The roles that have come my way have had that or a thing that they hide in a similar way. They present in a similar way because at the end of the day it’s me who’s there on the screen.